Oxford International Organizations

Prof Jean d'Aspremont, Dr Catherine Brölmann, and Prof Iain Scobbie

Provides practitioners, scholars, and students with instant access to classic as well as more obscure materials on the law of international organizations

Enables comparative research across a wide range of organizations

Headnotes include expert analysis of each document, setting out their impact on the internal working of the organization in question; and the development of the law of international organizations generally

Shows how international organizations have contributed to the development of international law

Continuously expanded with new materials to give researchers a full overview of the legal frameworks, processes, and impact of a growing range of organizations

Allows researchers to search and browse across the full range of organizations, and drill down into particular subjects with sophisticated browsing functionality

Powered by the Oxford Law Citator, allowing researchers to follow citations and other links between content

Primary Materials. Essential Analysis. Expertly Linked.

Oxford International Organizations

Prof Jean d'Aspremont, Dr Catherine Brölmann, and Prof Iain Scobbie

Description

International organizations (IOs) are an important area of research both within international law and international relations. They have been growing in number and influence over the past decades, and virtually every important question of foreign policy, trade, and international affairs now falls within the purview of one international organization or another. At the same time, important materials and decisions are scattered over the websites of hundreds of different IOs, if they are online at all, and are often difficult to find. Oxford International Organizations (OXIO) fills this gap, enabling comparative research of key issues across IOs.

OXIO collects and analyses primary materials on international organizations (IOs), ranging from their constituent instruments, resolutions, agreements with host states, to national and international court decisions and states' declarations and policy statements. The resource includes materials on lesser-known and regional organizations as well as well-known ones such as the UN, WHO, IMF, and World Bank.

Each headnote includes the full text of the material in question, an overview of basic information and core issues, and detailed analysis. Edited by a team of experts in the law of IOs and written by subject specialists, the headnotes put each document into context and explain its background and impact. The analysis draws out the materials' wider relevance for the law of international organizations, or for the international law and relations more generally. Taken together, the headnotes illuminate the internal procedures of a wide range of IOs and their external impact.

The subject taxonomy makes it easy to find materials on a certain topic across different IOs. Powered by the Oxford Law Citator, researchers can instantly follow citations from within OXIO headnotes to other sources.

With over 150 documents and headnotes at launch and regular updates following launch, OXIO will be invaluable to practitioners, scholars, and students working at the interface of international organizations and international law.

Oxford Law Citator

Access to the Oxford Law Citator is included with a subscription to OXIO. This service provides individual citation records for key references from all of the materials in the product, and for every decision and all legislation and official documents cited in the headnote. These citation records also provide links between the different source materials, allowing researchers to move from the documents included in OXIO to other online resources, whether other Oxford online services or public and official sources of primary materials. It offers unparalleled linking and manoeuvrability between references and sources, and provides an invaluable research tool for those studying international law.

Oxford International Organizations

Prof Jean d'Aspremont, Dr Catherine Brölmann, and Prof Iain Scobbie

Editorial Board

Editors-in-ChiefJean d'Aspremont, University of Manchester and Sciences Po ParisCatherine Brolmann, University of AmsterdamIain Scobbie, University of Manchester

Managing EditorGail Lythgoe, University of Glasgow

We would like to especially thank Phil Burton (University of Manchester) for his hard work and contributions to the database in its first phase.

Contributors:

Editorial BoardPierre Bodeau-Livinec, Universite Paris 8Jacob Cogan, University of CincinnatiRichard Collins, University College DublinFrederic Dopagne, Universite catholique de LouvainGerardine Goh Escolar, Iran-United States Claims TribunalSarah Heathcote, University of CanberraYenkong Hodu, University of ManchesterDevika Hovell, London School of EconomicsDan Joyner, University of AlabamaPaolo Palchetti, Universita of MacerataPhilippa Webb, University College London

Oxford International Organizations

Prof Jean d'Aspremont, Dr Catherine Brölmann, and Prof Iain Scobbie

From Our Blog

The 112th American Society of International Law's annual meeting (4-7 April 2018) will focus on the constitutive and often contentious nature of 'International Law in Practice'. Practice not only reifies the law, but how it is understood, applied, and enforced in practice shapes its meaning and impacts the generation of future international rules.